Author: Nietoâ€Rabiela, Fabiola; Ricoâ€Chávez, Oscar; Suzán, Gerardo; Stephens, Christopher R.
Title: Niche theoryâ€based modeling of assembly processes of viral communities in bats Cord-id: 3pln3ujo Document date: 2021_4_3
ID: 3pln3ujo
Snippet: Understanding the assembly processes of symbiont communities, including viromes and microbiomes, is important for improving predictions on symbionts’ biogeography and disease ecology. Here, we use phylogenetic, functional, and geographic filters to predict the similarity between symbiont communities, using as a test case the assembly process in viral communities of Mexican bats. We construct generalized linear models to predict viral community similarity, as measured by the Jaccard index, as a
Document: Understanding the assembly processes of symbiont communities, including viromes and microbiomes, is important for improving predictions on symbionts’ biogeography and disease ecology. Here, we use phylogenetic, functional, and geographic filters to predict the similarity between symbiont communities, using as a test case the assembly process in viral communities of Mexican bats. We construct generalized linear models to predict viral community similarity, as measured by the Jaccard index, as a function of differences in host phylogeny, host functionality, and spatial coâ€occurrence, evaluating the models using the Akaike information criterion. Two model classes are constructed: a “known†model, where virus–host relationships are based only on data reported in Mexico, and a “potential†model, where viral reports of all the Americas are used, but then applied only to bat species that are distributed in Mexico. Although the “known†model shows only weak dependence on any of the filters, the “potential†model highlights the importance of all three filter types—phylogeny, functional traits, and coâ€occurrence—in the assemblage of viral communities. The differences between the “known†and “potential†models highlight the utility of modeling at different “scales†so as to compare and contrast known information at one scale to another one, where, for example, virus information associated with bats is much scarcer.
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